ET:Gold prices hit 2-month highs on US data, SPDR inflows
SINGAPORE: Gold hit fresh two-month highs on Monday, helped by weak US data that increased the metal's safe-haven appeal, and further inflows into the world's biggest bullion-backed exchange traded fund (ETF).
Gold has gained about 8 per cent in the last nine sessions on the back of a weaker dollar, short-covering and technical buying.
Signs of increasing physical demand, and a turnaround in the outflows from gold-backed ETFs have also supported prices.
"Last quarter what was tugging at gold prices was the fight between money managers who are very bearish on gold and physical buyers who were quite bullish," said Joyce Liu, an investment analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore.
"The outlook (for gold prices) is slightly better now as it looks like we have bottomed out on the outflows."
SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest gold-backed ETF, posted a 0.4 per cent increase in holdings last week to 915.32 tonnes - its first increase since November 2012.
The fund has seen about $19 billion in outflows this year, and has weighed heavily on gold prices that have lost nearly a fifth of their value in 2013.
Hedge funds and money managers raised net long positions in gold and silver, a report by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed on Friday, indicating that investors' sentiment towards gold may be changing.
Spot gold had fallen 0.2 per cent to $1,372.91 an ounce by 0726 GMT on profit-taking, after hitting a two-month peak of $1,384.10 earlier.
Bullion climbed the most in five weeks last week, posting a near 5 per cent gain. Silver gained 14 per cent - its biggest weekly increase in almost five years.
Liu said charts show that the momentum for gold prices is still positive.
Spot gold is expected to break a $1,386 per ounce resistance and rise more to $1,403, Reuters technicals analyst Wang Tao said.
ECONOMIC DATA
Shanghai gold futures rose 2 per cent on Monday. Demand from China and India is set to soar to a record 1,000 tonnes each in 2013, the World Gold Council said last week.
US consumer sentiment ebbed in August and residential construction rose less than expected last month, potentially dimming hopes of an acceleration in economic activity in the third quarter and increasing gold's safe-haven appeal.
Economic data is being monitored by investors to gauge when the US Federal Reserve would begin tapering its commodities-friendly stimulus measures.
Minutes of the Fed's July policy meeting are due to be released on Wednesday.